Subscription to the full report on a daily basis can be obtained:
Send an eMail to dhsdailyadmin@mail.dhs.osis.gov with the subject "DHS Daily Open Source Infrastructure Report" and the following line in the body...subscribe.
To obtain a complete copy of the current report proceed to the DHS link below.
To obtain reports more than 10 business days old, send an eMail to DHS_Reports@e-computer-security.com. Be specific as to the reports you wish to receive.

• Pacific Gas and Electric Co. agreed June 21 to close the Diablo
Canyon Power Plant in California by 2025 and replace the nuclear plant with
solar power and other energy sources. – Associated Press

3. June 21,
Associated Press – (California) California closing last nuclear plant after 3
decades. Pacific Gas and Electric Co., and several environmental groups
agreed June 21 to close the Diablo Canyon Power Plant in San Luis Obispo County
by 2025 and replace the nuclear plant with solar power and other energy sources
that do not produce climate-changing greenhouse gases. The closure will ensure
that earthquakes will not fracture the facility as the plant sits 650 yards
from the nearest fault line. Source: http://abc7.com/news/california-closing-last-nuclear-plant-after-3-decades/1394704/

• Florida officials announced June 20 that Florida Power &
Light will have 10 years to clean up a large underground plume of saltwater
threatening drinking water well fields near its Turkey Point plant. – Miami
Herald

32. June 21,
Miami Herald – (Florida) Florida gives FPL 10 years to clean up cooling
canals. The Florida Department of Environmental Protection announced June
20 that Florida Power & Light will have 10 years to clean up a large
underground plume of saltwater threatening drinking water well fields near its
Turkey Point plant, which will include freshening and improving the efficiency
of the 5,900-acre loop of canals used to cool two nuclear reactors at the
plant, and the installation of a network of extraction wells to halt and
ultimately shrink the plume, among other plans.

5. June 21,
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission – (California) SEC halts scheme
defrauding pro athletes. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
unsealed a complaint June 21 charging and freezing the assets of The Ticket
Reserve Inc., its chief executive officer, a chief operating officer, and a
managing director from RGT Capital Management after the group allegedly
siphoned more than $33 million from professional athletes’ bank accounts
without their authorization in order to invest the money into The Ticket
Reserve, make Ponzi-like payments to existing investors using money from new investors,
and falsify documents, among other illicit actions in order to conceal the
scheme. The charges also allege that the managing director received nearly $2
million in hidden compensation from the company, failed to disclose to
investors that he was a member of The Ticket Reserve’s board of directions, and
falsely claimed to be a certified public accountant (CPA). Source: https://www.sec.gov/news/pressrelease/2016-124.html

25. June 22,
Softpedia – (International) Carbonite online backup service resets all
users passwords after cyber-attack. Carbonite, the online backup software
for Apple Mac and Microsoft Window products, reported that it issued a
service-wide password reset for all of its users June 21 after the company
discovered an ongoing, large account takeover (ATO) or Identify Testing Attacks
in its systems. The company stated the third-party attack did not compromise
any users’ accounts and initiated the password reset as a precautionary
measure. Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/carbonite-online-backup-service-resets-all-users-passwords-after-cyber-attack-505512.shtml

27. June 21,
SecurityWeek – (International) Several vulnerabilities patched in Libarchive
library. Libarchive released a new version for its open-source library,
Libarchive 3.2.1 after a security researcher from Cisco Talos discovered three
severe flaws in the system, including a stack-based buffer overflow flaw and a
heap corruption flaw that can lead to arbitrary code execution, as well as an
integer overflow flaw that could allow an attacker to execute arbitrary code
using specially crafted 7-Zip files. Source: http://www.securityweek.com/several-vulnerabilities-patched-libarchive-library

Links

About Me

U.S. Army Retired Chief Warrant Officer with more than 40 years in information technology and 35 years in information security. Became a Certified Information Systems Security Professional in 1995 and have taught computer security in Asia, Canada and the United States. Wrote a computer security column for 5 years in the 1980s titled "for the Sake Of Security", penname R. E. (Bob) Johnston, which was published in Computer Decisions.
Motto: "When entrusted to process, you are obligated to safeguard"